Judge Napolitano Weekly

EP:5 - American Heresy

7 min · 16. apr. 2026
episode EP:5 - American Heresy cover

Beskrivelse

The fastest way to lose a free society is to let the government watch first and justify later. Judge Andrew Napolitano makes the case that America is drifting toward an “American heresy” against the Fourth Amendment: warrantless surveillance that treats privacy as a privilege instead of a right. I walk through Justice Louis Brandeis’s timeless articulation of privacy as the right to be left alone, then trace the idea back to James Madison and the Bill of Rights. The founders were reacting to general warrants, sweeping search powers often blessed by secret processes, and they wrote constitutional limits to stop that kind of intrusion. Those limits were meant to protect more than “houses, papers, and effects” because freedom also lives in our thoughts, beliefs, and private associations. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

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Alle episoder

6 episoder

episode EP:5 - American Heresy cover

EP:5 - American Heresy

The fastest way to lose a free society is to let the government watch first and justify later. Judge Andrew Napolitano makes the case that America is drifting toward an “American heresy” against the Fourth Amendment: warrantless surveillance that treats privacy as a privilege instead of a right. I walk through Justice Louis Brandeis’s timeless articulation of privacy as the right to be left alone, then trace the idea back to James Madison and the Bill of Rights. The founders were reacting to general warrants, sweeping search powers often blessed by secret processes, and they wrote constitutional limits to stop that kind of intrusion. Those limits were meant to protect more than “houses, papers, and effects” because freedom also lives in our thoughts, beliefs, and private associations. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

16. apr. 20267 min
episode EP:2 - Free Speech Under Threat cover

EP:2 - Free Speech Under Threat

In this episode, I explain how a regulator doesn’t have to outright ban a story to change it. If broadcasters start to believe their license could be at risk, they’ll naturally gravitate toward the safest headline instead of the truest one. That’s the chilling effect the First Amendment was designed to prevent. I examine recent claims that the FCC may be pressuring how war coverage is presented, and I argue that even a “mere threat” can cause constitutional harm long before any case reaches a courtroom. I also take a step back from the daily headlines and trace the roots of free speech and a free press to James Madison and the Bill of Rights—what I call a bill of restraints on government power. These rights are not gifts from the state; they come from natural law. That distinction matters, because it means government officials have no authority to treat journalism like a compliance exercise. The First Amendment is written plainly as a limit on power—Congress shall make no law abridging speech or press—and its whole purpose is to keep government out of the speech business. From there, I connect that history to the FCC’s unique leverage over broadcasters, including the legacy of the equal time rule and how easily regulatory frameworks can be revived or repurposed. I close with a broader warning: if one administration can pressure coverage it dislikes today, another can do the same to different viewpoints tomorrow. If you care about civil liberties and the marketplace of ideas, this is a conversation worth hearing—and sharing. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands [https://redcircle.com/brands] Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy [https://redcircle.com/privacy]

23. mar. 20267 min